Marty Fletcher

American basketball player and coach
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican basketball player and coach
PlacesUnited States of America
isSports coach Basketball coach
Work fieldSports
Gender
Male
Birth6 March 1951
Age73 years
Star signPisces
Education
University of Maryland
The details

Biography

Martin P. "Marty" Fletcher (born March 6, 1951) is an American retired college basketball coach. Coaching for over twenty seasons from the early 1980s to the 2004, Fletcher led three different Division I schools while winning two conference regular season and tournament championships while collecting over 250 total wins. During the 2003–04 season, Fletcher was the only coach in Division I or Division II to be the head coach for a school's men's and women's teams. That year, he took over the University of Colorado Colorado Springs' (UCCS) men's team for one season while also spending his third year in charge of the women's team.

He is a 1973 graduate of the University of Maryland.

Coaching career

Fletcher first became a head coach in 1982 for the Virginia Military Institute following the departure of his predecessor Charlie Schmaus. Schmaus had led the Keydets to a Sweet Sixteen appearance in 1977 and a 26–4 record, their best in school history. The team was led by future VMI Hall of Famer and NBA player Ron Carter. Despite the initial success, however, by the time Fletcher took over, the Keydets were coming off a 1–25 season and had only won five times in the past two years. In their first season under their new head coach, VMI continued to struggle with a 2–25 record, but showed significant improvement the following year and achieved a winning record by 1985 at 16–14. Fletcher then left the school the next season, leaving VMI with a .330 winning percentage.

Fletcher's most endured period of success came at the University of Southwestern Louisiana, now known as Louisiana. As the Ragin' Cajuns head coach for eleven years, he led the school to a regular season and tournament championship in 1992 in their inaugural Sun Belt Conference season, as well as another tournament title in 1994. Seven of Fletcher's eleven years at Louisiana produced winning seasons.

Fletcher then left for the Denver Pioneers, who were a Division II school at the time of his arrival. He assisted the program in its transition to Division I and the Sun Belt, but could not produce a winning season at Denver. He left the school following the conclusion of the 2000–01 season.

Head coaching record

Note: These are for his college men's teams only. His time as UCCS's women's coach is not included in these records.

SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
VMI Keydets (Southern Conference)
1982–83VMI2–251–159th
1983–84VMI8–194–129th
1984–85VMI16–147–9T–5th
1985–86VMI11–175–117th
VMI:37–7517–47
Southwestern Louisiana (Independent)
1986–87Southwestern LA11–17
Southwestern Louisiana (American South Conference)
1987–88Southwestern LA12–163–76th
1988–89Southwestern LA17–124–64th
1989–90Southwestern LA20–94–64th
1990–91Southwestern LA21–106–64th
Southwestern Louisiana (Sun Belt Conference)
1991–92Southwestern LA21–1112–41stNCAA Round of 32
1992–93Southwestern LA17–1311–73rd
1993–94Southwestern LA22–813–52ndNCAA Round of 64
1994–95Southwestern LA7–224–149th
1995–96Southwestern LA16–129–95th
1996–97Southwestern LA12–169–97th
Southwestern Louisiana:176–14675–73
Denver (Division II)
1997–98Denver7–20
Denver (Independent)
1998–99Denver10–17
Denver (Sun Belt Conference)
1999–00Denver6–223–138th
2000–01Denver10–185–115th
Denver:33–778–24
UCCS (Division II)
2003–04UCCS5–22
UCCS:5–22
Total:251–320

           
           
           
     

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 03 Aug 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.